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Gore vs. Bradley vs. Russert
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Issue 1 is the Democratic presidential debates--both Friday night's face-off
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on ABC's Nightline and Sunday morning's joint appearance on NBC's
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Meet the Press . Issue 2 is the GOP race--including George W.
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Bush's remark in a debate last week that Christ "changed [his] heart" and a new
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poll friendly to John McCain.
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Sitting inches apart on Meet the Press , Bill Bradley and Al Gore
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carry on the most spirited back-and-forth of the presidential campaign. Unlike
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most debates, however, this one has a hands-on-moderator in Tim Russert, who
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peppers the candidates with his special brand of heavy-hitting,
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pinpoint-accurate questions. Russert is especially tough on the entitlement
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issue: He shows both candidates a government report, signed by three Clinton
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Cabinet secretaries, which concludes that by 2035 politicians will either have
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to raise taxes or cut Social Security and Medicare benefits. But neither
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candidate will commit to doing either, despite Russert's insistence that there
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is no free lunch. (Gore--wearing a dark blue blazer rather than his trademark
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"earth tones"--calls Russert's notion "elite opinion" and then reasserts his
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commitment to the working man.)
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Jumping on Bradley's boat, Gore promises that he too will forgo soft money
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in the general election if John McCain is the Republican nominee. (Read about
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Bradley and McCain's campaign-finance pledge in
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Slate
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's "The Week/The Spin" and "Ballot
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Box.") Gore also pledges to renounce all TV and radio advertising in the
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primary campaign if Bradley will go along and challenges the former senator to
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two debates per week as a substitute for the forgone ads. Bradley dismisses
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both proposals as "ridiculous."
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Late in the program Russert catches Gore flatfooted. Asked if he would
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"admit that in 1996 the Clinton-Gore fund-raising apparatus was overly
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aggressive, perhaps unethical," Gore says:
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I'm not going to use those words. I think, obviously, if we had to do it
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over again, the point is do you learn from your mistakes, and I certainly have.
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I strongly support--
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RUSSERT: What was the big mistake that was made, if you learned from it?
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GORE: Oh, I think, um, pushing the limits, um, all this was reviewed and,
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um, charges were brought. But I think it was a mistake nonetheless.
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On CNN's Late Edition (the only pundit show taped after
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Meet the Press ), Susan Page opines that Gore's campaign-finance ploy
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worked and Tucker Carlson says that Bradley looked haughty, but Steve Roberts
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thinks that Gore came across as he always does--like a nervous Nellie. On ABC's
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This Week , Bill Kristol notes that in Friday's
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Nightline debate, neither Democratic candidate mentioned the name of
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their party's popular incumbent president, Bill Clinton. Many pundits agree
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that there are still few substantive differences between Bradley and Gore. Mike
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McCurry ( This Week ) calls the two candidates Diet Coke and Diet Pepsi,
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while Margaret Carlson (CNN's Capital Gang ) says deciding which candidate to vote for is
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like "trying to choose between 1 percent or 2 percent milk." (To read "Ballot
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Box" on both Democratic debates, click here; to
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read Chatterbox's dissent, click here.)
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The pundits ruminate on the appropriateness of George W.'s remark in his
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third presidential debate that his favorite political philosopher is "Christ,
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because he changed my heart." Gloria Borger (PBS's Washington Week in
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Review ), Margaret Carlson, and Al Hunt ( Capital Gang ) think
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it unseemly to wear one's religion on one's sleeve, and Bill Kristol sees
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baby-boomer selfishness in Bush's transformation of a political question into a
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personal one. But George F. Will ( This Week ) and William F. Buckley
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( Fox News
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Sunday ) see little wrong with a simple declaration of faith.
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On Late Edition , Wolf Blitzer trots out Friday's CNN/Gallup/ USA
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Today poll indicating that if John McCain and Bill Bradley win some early
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primaries, Bush voters may switch to McCain, but Gore voters likely will not
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switch to Bradley. The poll also shows that campaign-finance reform is low on
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voters' lists of election concerns; asked about this on Late Edition ,
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McCain blames the wording of the questions. Paul Gigot and Mark Shields (both
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of PBS's NewsHour
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With Jim Lehrer ) say that the poll doesn't matter: The
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campaign-finance issue is merely a prop for McCain's better selling points--his
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biography and his character.
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Et Cetera: In an interview on Late Edition , Ken
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Starr says that if he could do it over again, he would have used the
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independent counsel's office as a bully pulpit, appearing on television to
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counter the White House's spin doctors.
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Being, Nothingness, and Peanuts
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[ Peanuts ] is also a commentary on the culture. The recurring theme
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is too much and too little self-esteem. Lucy has too much, and Charlie Brown
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has too little. There is a kind of mild metaphysic involved. In one of the
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strips, one of the characters is jumping rope and says, "Suddenly it struck me
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that it all seemed futile." Well, what doesn't?
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--George F. Will, on the legacy of Charles
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Schulz's cartoon strip ( This Week )
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Last Word
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It immediately communicated a certain reverence, which is to be welcomed.
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But Christ was not a political philosopher, he was the source of philosophy,
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the source of goodness, the source of contemplation. So there is a formal
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objection to his being named as such.
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--William F. Buckley Jr., on George W. Bush's remark that Christ had
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"changed [his] heart" ( Fox News Sunday )
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Now, if Jesus is a political thinker, I assume he's for the Comprehensive
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Test-Ban Treaty, blessed are the peacemakers. And I assume he's pro-Earned
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Income Tax Credit, blessed are the poor.
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--Al Hunt, on the same topic ( Capital Gang )
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